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Wednesday, September 30, 2015

If there was one dominant contentious
geopolitical phenomenon that has dominated headlines in 2015, it is that of
international borders.Donald Trump is
obsessed with Mexicans in the USA; David Cameron et al are obsessed with Syrians
in Europe; Colombians are fleeing Venezuela; North Korea is goading the South
again; and Israel’s encroaching of Palestine is ongoing.

The news media is abundant with
‘experts’ explaining the ‘facts’ and social media is abundant with opinions and
anecdotes that have gone viral, yet much rarer are conversations with people
who actually live on the border and how this physical division affects them
psychically.Documentarians Stephanie Barbey and Luc Peter have decided to focus on this
underreported group, the citizens who live ‘on-the-edge’ between Mexico and
Arizona.

Tuesday, September 29, 2015

When Paul (Alex Humes) is fired from his tedious office job and upsets his
anxious girlfriend Kate (Heidi Agerholm
Balle), he decides to take up running to get fit and pass the time whilst
looking for new work.Sceptical that he
is going to take his new hobby seriously, Kate insists that he spends time with
obnoxious city-boy blowhard Adrian (Valmike
Rampersad).

Exhausted by Adrian’s arrogance and
avarice, Paul is more intrigued by mysterious runner John (Mark Arnold) that he keeps bumping in to (quite literally).John has a dislike of office workers and the
Adrians of the city, and begins to change the way Paul sees himself and his
desire for employment and acceptance by his friends…

On the bank of the Yakoun River in Haida
Gwaii, British Columbia, used to stand a unique tree known by the locals as The
Golden Spruce.It had an intriguing
genetic mutation that let to its needles to look golden amongst the other green
trees surrounding it, which led to generations of indigenous Haida people who
lived on the islands giving it a mythic significance and naming it Kiid K’iyaas.

On 20th January 1997, a
disillusioned former ‘forest technician’ called Grant Hadwin took some final
selfies in front of the sacred tree and then expertly felled it.The focus point of his anger was the
seemingly arbitrary protection of the Golden Spruce tree amongst the rest of
the doomed rainforest, and the motive behind his ecoterrorism was to draw
attention to the ecological injustice and gain support for the protection of the
whole forest.Needless to say, his
actions didn’t go down well with the locals…

Monday, September 28, 2015

In the autumn of 1995, a Danish
dissident called Niels Holck was concocting
an audacious plan to try and help rebel factions in West Bengal fight the
oppressive Communist Party of India.With the help of Peter Bleach,
an ex British Intelligence Officer turned ‘defense trader’, Niels wanted to use
a light aircraft to parachute drop an assortment of AK47s and other military
weapons in to the region to arm the insurgents. (soundfamiliar?)

Unbeknownst to Niels however, Peter was
in communication with the UK government, whom had told him that during a
layover in India, the government would arrest the plane and he would get the
credit for stopping an international terrorist.What could possibly go wrong…?

Bullfighting.Even the word itself is provocative.Yet unlike its analogous animal bloodsports,
such as cockbaiting or Monkey Knife Fights, in its country of origin Spain,
Bullfighting is still a prestigious and noble cultural entertainment.

Modern day Matador Antonia Barrera is obsessed with Bullfighting.He has dedicated his whole life to spending
time in the bullring, trying to win adulation from the crowds and working his way
up to the prestige stadiums of Madrid.From a teenager practicing on the streets, to a young adult gaining
notoriety in Mexico, Barrera knew that he wanted to be in the ring.He’s the kind of guy who says, with a deadly
straight-face, things like “I’ve never had a relationship, even with a woman,
as intimate as the one with the bull.”This is his life.

Thursday, September 24, 2015

When Oliver (Simon Haycock) brings James (Hugo
Bolton) to his family’s holiday villa in the South of France, his hopes for
a secluded romantic trip are thwarted by the addition of James’ friend Caroline
(Elly Condron).Recently splitting up from her own boyfriend,
Caroline begins to turn her attention to Oliver and the dynamic of the holiday
begins to change…

At its core, Wasp is about the importance of glances and non-verbal
communication over dialogue.The
increasingly strained connection between James and Oliver, and the bourgeoning
allegiance between Oliver and Caroline, mostly begins with eye contact (or lack
of it).This intention is probably why
the dialogue of the film is less refined than the visuals.Why do indie LGBT films always have to have a
scene where characters analyse what it means
to be gay…?Yet as the film (and I
imagine, the shoot) moves on, the dialogue becomes more natural and confident.

In between scenes, the camera constantly
returns to close-ups of wasps.At first
an apparent metaphor for Caroline’s unexpected presence in the couples’
holiday, but quickly they seem to highlight a general unease and irritation in
the house – a house that is becoming increasingly more oppressive.Especially the ice-cold pool…

Whereas Oliver has a confidence and
seriousness about him and is more at fault for the tension in the house, it is
James who the camera lingers on for longest as he begins to doubt his two
friends.And it is James’ whose emerges
as the most interesting performance.

Yet ultimately, it is undeniably the
actions and sexual desires of the woman that disrupt the narrative, which is a
welcome role-reversal, even for a gay love story.

Wednesday, September 23, 2015

Antonia (Rebecca Calder) is a wry and restrained investment banker who
enjoys the luxuries that her career provides her, and Max (Jack Gordon) is a self-assured aspiring East London actor.They are getting to know each playing teasing
psychological games with one another and deconstructing the act of ‘dating’
over the course of a few successful evenings.As they begin to reveal themselves, they each disclose secrets and
insecurities that bring them closer together but ultimately lead to commit
shocking acts of revenge…

Writer/Director Martin Stitt manages to create a pair of engaging characters with
realistic dialogue, and then direct the actors to bring the script to life with
beautifully comfortable and naturalistic performances. The way in which Max embodies the deafening
monotony of unemployment, and how Max and Antonia recreate the cloudy
irrationality of a couples argument are both uncomfortably authentic.As the narrative moves towards its troubling
conclusion, both of the characters elicit sympathy and disdain from the
audience in equal parts – the sign of a successful an engaging drama.

Tuesday, September 22, 2015

Malcolm (Matthew Jure) is an East-End property developer who lost everything
after the financial crisis of 2008.He
is left with only one dingy terrace house that is in dire need of renovation,
yet the shock of losing so much has crippled his enthusiasm and left him with a
debilitating housebound agoraphobia and appetite for heavy drinking.His only friend Sonny (Richard Pepple) is growing increasingly frustrated with his
inactivity, and adds to Malcolm’s anxiety by demanding the repayment of a
substantial loan.And just as the
situation couldn’t get more stressful, his eventual attempt at home
improvements lead to a dark discovery in the very structure of the building…